Don’t be fooled by this glorious stretch of sunny weather. The Bay Area’s rainy season is not over, and more wet stuff is expected to impact the region next week.

Rain returns to the Bay Area’s forecast Monday night, and the Tuesday morning commute should feature wet and slippery roadways, according to Steve Anderson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

“This is typical for this time of year,” Anderson said. “Sunny and warm weather for a period, and then slip back to cool, rainy conditions.”

The ridge of high pressure that is allowing the Bay Area to enjoy temperatures in the mid 70s will begin to break down by the weekend, Anderson said. Temperatures will begin to cool off this weekend.

By late Monday, there will be a chance of rain in the entire Bay Area.

“Nothing big, nothing strong, just March showers,” Anderson said.

The weather service is predicting another chance of rain in the middle of next week.

Following an extremely wet start to 2017, March has been relatively dry in the Bay Area. Rainfall totals in March are running below normal in every Bay Area city, including San Francisco (74 percent of normal), Oakland (68 percent), Livermore (54 percent), San Jose (28 percent) and Santa Rosa (24 percent of normal).

But rainfall totals throughout the Bay Area are all running above average for the rainy season, which began on Oct. 1. Through Thursday, Santa Rosa has received 52.71 inches (177 percent of normal). Others include Oakland at 24.29 inches (145 percent), San Francisco at 27.75 inches (143 percent) and San Jose at 15.61 inches (124 percent).

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